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COLUMBUS , NEEDS Worley!
SAMPLE MUNICIPAL NON-PARTISAN
PRIMARY BALLOT
(a) Mark only with black lead pencil.
(b) Instructions to voters: Vote for not more than the number of persons to be elected to the office designated by making a cross In the square opposite and to the left of their names.
(c)If you wrongfully mark, tear or deface this ballot, return it to the Judges and obtain another.
For Mayor
(Vote for not more than one)
W. HERBERT DAILEY
MELVILLE P FRANK
MYRON B. GESSAMAN
HARRY B. LAMON
JOHN M. LEWIS
(x) HENRY W. WORLEY
WALTER M. BALLARD|
LAWRENCE S. CHIC|
For Auditor
(Vote for not more than one)
D. C. WE5TENHAVER
SAMUEL J. WILLIS
JOHN E. DAVIES
MARION W. McINTYRE
For Clerk of the Municipal Court
(Vote for not more than one)
JAMES T. FOLEY
ETHEL E. GEORGE
MAX GUTKIND
FRANCIS D. HOUSTON
JOHN S. STITH
ARTHUR J. BLOSSER
GARRETT M. COTTER
For Councilmen
(Vote for not more than four)
LOTT B. BURKE
JOHN M. COLLINS
RICHARD W. GORDON
ALBERT B. GREGG
HOWARD C. HARTMAN
FRANKLIN H. HOLMES
FRANK C KARNS
GEORGE F. KETTERER
HENRY A. KOONTZ
CLARENCE W. LAMNECK
DAN A. McENEANY
WYATT L. MILLIKIN
EDWARD M. SCANLAN
GEORGE E. WALSH
CHARLES W. WARFIELD
ROGER 11 ADDISON
PAUL E. BOWEN
Here is the Way to Vote for …
Mayor Worley for his Second Term
The City of Columbus in its Municipal Election this year has its first strictly non-partisan primary September 17th. The provision for this change in the law became effective January 1. 1934.
Any properly registered citizen desiring to vote in this non-partisan municipal primary can present himself orherself at the proper precinct election booth between the hours of 6:30 o'clock A. M. and 6:30 o'clock P. M., Tuesday, September 17th, 1935, and ask the precinct officers in charge for a non-partisan municipal ballot, without stating his or her political affiliations as has heretofore been required under the State party primary law.
Thereupon, the elector will receive an official ballot, a replica of which appears in the opposite column to the left of this statement. It will contain the names of eight candidates for Mayor, four candidates for Auditor, seven candidates for Clerk of the Municipal Court and seventeen candidates for Council. All these primary candidates have been properly nominated by petition and there will be no party emblem appearing on the ballot, nor any way to tell the politics of any candidate. To vote for Henry W. Worley for Mayor for a second term, it is necessary to put an X in front of his name as it appears on the sample ballot. Mayor Worley's name will not always appear in the same place on the ballot for the names of candidates for each office rotate, after starting alphabetically on the first ballot.
The elector receiving this sample ballot may mark it in private and take it to the election booth as a guide to assist in marking the official ballot. He or she, after marking the official ballot with one X only before the name or Henry W. Worley for Mayor, may place an X before the name of any one of the candidates for Auditor, any one candidate for Clerk of the Municipal Court and before four candidates for City Council and then remain in the booth until the ballot is placed in the ballot box by the precinct official in charge.
This, of course, does not apply to the Judicial Ticket, which is two ballots with only one name on each — one a Democrat the other a Republican. A Democrat voting a Democratic judicial ticket must declare his or her politics and a Republican desiring to vote the Republican Judicial Ticket must state hit or her politics, but it is not necessary to vote in this instance unless an elector desires to make a record of his or her party politics or compliment a friend for the Municipal Judgeship for there is no opposition for both candidates nominated by petition for the Municipal Judgeship will automatically be nominated when one vote is cast for each party candidate. Otherwise, the primary election is entirely non-partisan and it is essentially important for voters to remember the names of the persons for whom they desire to vote or take this sample ballot, properly marked, at a guide to memory with them to the election booth Tuesday, September 17th.
Those who know Henry W. Worley best say that “One good term deserves another,” and his friends solicit your assistance in nominating Mayor Worley for a second term because of his good record in making Columbus a bigger and better city in which to live, rear a family and conduct a successful business during his first term, so as to give him an opportunity to complete the Public Works Program he inaugurated and has thus far successfully, economically and efficiently conducted.
Worley Headquarters—Jonas P. Pletsch, Chairman, Robert J. Beatty, Exec. Sec’y
234 Rowlands Bldg., Columbus, Ohio ADams 2951

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Text Transcript

COLUMBUS , NEEDS Worley!
SAMPLE MUNICIPAL NON-PARTISAN
PRIMARY BALLOT
(a) Mark only with black lead pencil.
(b) Instructions to voters: Vote for not more than the number of persons to be elected to the office designated by making a cross In the square opposite and to the left of their names.
(c)If you wrongfully mark, tear or deface this ballot, return it to the Judges and obtain another.
For Mayor
(Vote for not more than one)
W. HERBERT DAILEY
MELVILLE P FRANK
MYRON B. GESSAMAN
HARRY B. LAMON
JOHN M. LEWIS
(x) HENRY W. WORLEY
WALTER M. BALLARD|
LAWRENCE S. CHIC|
For Auditor
(Vote for not more than one)
D. C. WE5TENHAVER
SAMUEL J. WILLIS
JOHN E. DAVIES
MARION W. McINTYRE
For Clerk of the Municipal Court
(Vote for not more than one)
JAMES T. FOLEY
ETHEL E. GEORGE
MAX GUTKIND
FRANCIS D. HOUSTON
JOHN S. STITH
ARTHUR J. BLOSSER
GARRETT M. COTTER
For Councilmen
(Vote for not more than four)
LOTT B. BURKE
JOHN M. COLLINS
RICHARD W. GORDON
ALBERT B. GREGG
HOWARD C. HARTMAN
FRANKLIN H. HOLMES
FRANK C KARNS
GEORGE F. KETTERER
HENRY A. KOONTZ
CLARENCE W. LAMNECK
DAN A. McENEANY
WYATT L. MILLIKIN
EDWARD M. SCANLAN
GEORGE E. WALSH
CHARLES W. WARFIELD
ROGER 11 ADDISON
PAUL E. BOWEN
Here is the Way to Vote for …
Mayor Worley for his Second Term
The City of Columbus in its Municipal Election this year has its first strictly non-partisan primary September 17th. The provision for this change in the law became effective January 1. 1934.
Any properly registered citizen desiring to vote in this non-partisan municipal primary can present himself orherself at the proper precinct election booth between the hours of 6:30 o'clock A. M. and 6:30 o'clock P. M., Tuesday, September 17th, 1935, and ask the precinct officers in charge for a non-partisan municipal ballot, without stating his or her political affiliations as has heretofore been required under the State party primary law.
Thereupon, the elector will receive an official ballot, a replica of which appears in the opposite column to the left of this statement. It will contain the names of eight candidates for Mayor, four candidates for Auditor, seven candidates for Clerk of the Municipal Court and seventeen candidates for Council. All these primary candidates have been properly nominated by petition and there will be no party emblem appearing on the ballot, nor any way to tell the politics of any candidate. To vote for Henry W. Worley for Mayor for a second term, it is necessary to put an X in front of his name as it appears on the sample ballot. Mayor Worley's name will not always appear in the same place on the ballot for the names of candidates for each office rotate, after starting alphabetically on the first ballot.
The elector receiving this sample ballot may mark it in private and take it to the election booth as a guide to assist in marking the official ballot. He or she, after marking the official ballot with one X only before the name or Henry W. Worley for Mayor, may place an X before the name of any one of the candidates for Auditor, any one candidate for Clerk of the Municipal Court and before four candidates for City Council and then remain in the booth until the ballot is placed in the ballot box by the precinct official in charge.
This, of course, does not apply to the Judicial Ticket, which is two ballots with only one name on each — one a Democrat the other a Republican. A Democrat voting a Democratic judicial ticket must declare his or her politics and a Republican desiring to vote the Republican Judicial Ticket must state hit or her politics, but it is not necessary to vote in this instance unless an elector desires to make a record of his or her party politics or compliment a friend for the Municipal Judgeship for there is no opposition for both candidates nominated by petition for the Municipal Judgeship will automatically be nominated when one vote is cast for each party candidate. Otherwise, the primary election is entirely non-partisan and it is essentially important for voters to remember the names of the persons for whom they desire to vote or take this sample ballot, properly marked, at a guide to memory with them to the election booth Tuesday, September 17th.
Those who know Henry W. Worley best say that “One good term deserves another,” and his friends solicit your assistance in nominating Mayor Worley for a second term because of his good record in making Columbus a bigger and better city in which to live, rear a family and conduct a successful business during his first term, so as to give him an opportunity to complete the Public Works Program he inaugurated and has thus far successfully, economically and efficiently conducted.
Worley Headquarters—Jonas P. Pletsch, Chairman, Robert J. Beatty, Exec. Sec’y
234 Rowlands Bldg., Columbus, Ohio ADams 2951